%0 Journal Article %T The Grammaticalization of Down %A Kinga S dej %J Studia Anglica Posnaniensia %D 2009 %I De Gruyter Open %R 10.2478/v10121-009-0007-4 %X The present paper discusses the grammaticalization of down, focusing on when the process began and how it developed. The ultimate origin of down, both the adverb and the preposition, should be traced back to OE d¨±n ¡®hill, mountain¡¯, whose frequency of occurrence in Old English is comparable to those of beorg and munt. By means of grammaticalization the noun d¨±n came to function as an adverb meaning ¡®in a descending direction; from above, or towards that which is below; from a higher to lower place or position¡¯ already in Late Old English. The adverbial meaning of d¨±n is derived from OE of d¨±ne ¡®off the hill or height¡¯ (glossing L de monte). The expression of d¨±ne gave rise to the adverb ad¨±ne which was aphetized to d¨±n (doun, down) at the beginning of the twelfth century. By analysing the textual evidence, the present investigation is an attempt at verifying this date. %U http://versita.metapress.com/content/5r676j4577085444/?p=0fde8fd785854e16ab28cfba8ebc29e3&pi=6